When food is involved, I guarantee everyone will get to the point. Bill and Pam Farell, international speakers and relationship specialists, nailed it up with their book “Men are like Waffles and Women are like Spaghetti!”
Men process life in separated boxes; just the way waffles look like. Each issue is placed in one of these boxes. So a man’s brain is capable of doing one task at a time depending on which box he is focusing on. If he is at work, then he is at work! If he is watching the game, then he is watching the game! Full stop! His focus belongs there and only there. Most men have boxes with thoughts about work or previous experiences but the sad truth is that these thoughts will never turn into words. So never be surprised when you ask a man what he is thinking about and he says “NOTHING.”
As for women, they process life just like a plate of spaghetti where each noodles intersects one another. This means that every thought is linked and connected to another thought. This proves the fact that woman can manage to multitask. If a woman is at the hair dresser fixing her hair, then she is talking on the phone, texting her friends, making plans for the weekend, reading a magazine, replying to emails, and socializing with other ladies around her!
This difference goes back to the brain wiring between the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere. For a man, both brains are connected with a few connecting fibers which is not the case in the woman’s brain! She can manage to do several unrelated things at the same time. Understanding the brain function of the opposite sex, would always be a good strategy to avoid clashes.

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2 months agoby akasaraprivyPeople are talking about: Ahed Tamimi Diana Vreeland on Vogue personalities: “It was a revolution, and for the first time youth went out to live, instead of waiting for life to come to them, which is the difference between the sixties and any other decade I’ve lived in.” @dvdianavreeland ————————————— RepostBy @mrarnaut : "Vogue is about style, but also about great journalism. And this was definitely one of the most challenging stories to put together, but also one of the most rewarding. Having in consideration the current affairs, I’ve asked activist Ahed Tamimi to write a letter to be published in